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Psychosocial factors promoting resilience during the menopausal transition

Despite significant biological, psychological, and social challenges in the perimenopause, most women report an overall positive well-being and appear to be resilient to potentially negative effects of this life phase. The objective of this study was to detect psychosocial variables which contribute...

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Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores principales: Süss, Hannah, Willi, Jasmine, Grub, Jessica, Ehlert, Ulrike
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Springer Vienna 2020
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7979610/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/32719937
http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s00737-020-01055-7
Descripción
Sumario:Despite significant biological, psychological, and social challenges in the perimenopause, most women report an overall positive well-being and appear to be resilient to potentially negative effects of this life phase. The objective of this study was to detect psychosocial variables which contribute to resilience in a sample of perimenopausal women. A total of 135 healthy perimenopausal women aged 40–56 years completed a battery of validated psychosocial questionnaires including variables related to resilience, well-being, and mental health. First, using exploratory factor analysis, we examined which of the assessed variables related to resilience can be assigned to a common factor. Second, linear regression analyses were performed to investigate whether a common resilience factor predicts well-being and mental health in the examined sample of women. Optimism (LOT-R-O), emotional stability (BFI-K-N), emotion regulation (ERQ), self-compassion (SCS-D), and self-esteem (RSES) in perimenopausal women can be allocated to a single resilience-associated factor. Regression analyses revealed that this factor is related to higher life satisfaction (SWLS; β = .39, p < .001, adj. R(2) = .20), lower perceived stress (PSS-10; β = − .55, p < .001, adj. R(2) = .30), lower psychological distress (BSI-18; β = − .49, p < .001, adj. R(2) = .22), better general psychological health (GHQ-12; β = − .49, p < .001, adj. R(2) = .22), milder menopausal complaints (MRS II; β = − .41, p < .001, adj. R(2) = .18), and lower depressive symptoms (ADS-L; β = − .32, p < .001, adj. R(2) = .26). The α levels were adjusted for multiple testing. Our findings confirm that several psychosocial variables (optimism, emotional stability, emotion regulation, self-compassion, and self-esteem) can be allocated to one common resilience-associated factor. This resilience factor is strongly related to women’s well-being as well as mental health in perimenopause.